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Kensington Market Sweets Tour Review

5/1/2015

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by Sunni Zhou (age 12) and Raymond Qiu (age 10)

Have you ever “swum” with sharks, sailed under the falls, or set paper airplanes flying without the teacher knowing?  All of this amusement can be found within Toronto, which consists of many tourist destinations – Ripley’s, Niagara Falls, and the Ontario Science Center.  But even knowing all of this doesn’t make you a local resident – you missed at least one of the tours. 

Kensington Market Sweets Tour, Toronto’s only sweets tasting tour, used its special magnet and attracted sweet teeth all over the world.  There were people from the Great Britain, Mexico, and more local residents.  This tour started at the Ding Dong Pastries, in the Kensington Market, Toronto Downtown.  The six sweet stores we visited were the Ding Dong Pastries, Filipino Popcorn Shop, Take Out; Eat in Catering, Churros, Wanda’s Pie in the Sky, and the Blue Banana Market. Our tour guide’s name was Audrey Ooi and she was the one who introduced us to all the sweets and told us interesting facts about them.    
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From left: Raymond Qiu, Tour guide Audrey Ooi, Sunni Zhou
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Ding Dong Pastries – egg tart

This is our first stop. The Ding Dong Pastries was filled with different kinds of bread, and workers zooming in and out carrying fresh trays, ready to be sold.  Not long after, our tour guide arrived and initiated a group introduction.  After everyone’s warm introduction, the tour began.  She explained that there are 2 different kinds of sugar (sugar beet sugar and sugarcane sugar). We learned about the fascinating history of how sugar was made, when it was made, and how Canada contributed to the creation of sugar. Who knew the Napoleon war played an important role in sugar?

                Two-third of the world’s sugar comes from sugar canes, but they are only grown in the equator.  Therefore, the US also discovered sugar beet, which is grown in more temperate forests.

                The tour guide soon gave each of us an egg tart to taste. There are 2 types of egg tart. One of which is Portuguese style and the other of which is Chinese style.  The Portuguese egg tart includes more fruit, whereas the Chinese Hong Kong style is made of only egg.  The egg tart was made in the 1980s and quickly became a popular dessert around the world. Nowadays, we find egg tarts in all kinds of shops.


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Filipino Popcorn Shop – popcorn of many flavors

                Before we were done licking our lips to the great savory, we had already stepped into the Filipino Popcorn Shop.  When you walk into the house fashioned building, you see bags full of colorful popcorn piled high on shelves, and a worker who introduced some gumball machines full of popcorn as “samples”.  It was free to the tour members, so we tried almost one of everything. Bacon and cheddar, pizza, smoky chipotle, ketchup, grapes, banana, pina colanda, blueberry, toffee, sweet chili pepper, honey mustard, hot jalapeño, jalapeño cheddar, ranch, cheesy barbeque… Do you think I listed all of them? What if I told you that these are just one-third of all?  We enjoyed the Cheddar, Cheesy BBQ, both jalapeños flavors, and bananas.

                It took a big effort to create the shop, a bigger effort to get the products, and an even bigger effort to create so many different flavors.  This shop presented the most awkward kind of sweets, but also our favorite.


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                Akrems Shoppe– Middle East sweets

                We got energy from the popcorns and could walk even faster. Soon enough, we were at the third stop, a Middle East store.  We got to try out some salted pistachios and candies, of which brought a flavor that showed not only the food, but even the kind of emotion of working. 

                Voice K had a pleasure to interview the owner, Hiyan Samara, who enjoys making others happy.  She makes all kinds of food, and others really like it, which makes Hiyan joyful. 

In the beginning, Hiyan sold clothes and her husband sold food.  Then they worked together to make food, such as fellahin.  Everybody went to eat the food and it became very popular.

                Hiyan and her husband established the building from scratch, and it took over two and half years to rebuild it.  But, in our opinion, it was worth it.

                “Little by little, we built up this store, and improved our reputation.  From all over the world, magazines came to talk about our food,” Hiyan said.  “This is an accomplishment that makes me very happy.”

                “Communication is very important.  It is the key to success,” as Hiyan said. “It builds our community and jobs and improves it.”

                Churros

                Some people love bread, though, some people dislike it.  But, we bet Churros is something that no matter your culture or taste, you’ll be willing to try.  The worker took out a deep-fried hollow strip of bread, then using a bottle of chocolate sauce; he squeezed it into the fluffy cake bread center.  This food came from either Portugal or Spain. They still debate on who invented it, and with two completely different stories. 

                Audrey said, “The Spanish said what happened, was that these shepherds were living in the mountains of Spain, and they baked the bread over a fire.  This soon developed Churros.  And they say this is true, because the Churros are named after a kind of sheep.”

                The Portuguese story is that they actually went to China, in the 1600s, and saw this kind of hollow, fluffy, crispy tube of bread, about 30 cm long.  When they went home and made it, they failed, but made the completely new generation, that is just really popular these days. 

               

Wanda’s Pie in the Sky

                Does she cook pies in the sky?  No.  It’s just a creative name.  Wanda created pies, cakes, salads, and cupcakes to fit the taste of her customers.  Wanda started baking since she was 8 using the berries in her mother’s backyard.  When she grew older, she went into an arts and design university, where she decided to take her career of baking.  We tasted mini cupcakes, of which were red velvets, and vanillas.  We enjoyed the red velvet more than the vanilla ones. There were many cool cake displays such as rainbow cakes, and animal cookies.

Since the pan-am games are coming to Toronto this year, this shop will work harder to be prepared when millions of people come to Toronto in the summer.

                Blue Banana market

                The Blue Banana market ranges from food to jewelry.  It is a grocery store that sells things from many different countries. We tasted the marshmallows, which were made by hand. There were many different flavors such as coffee, mint and strawberry. The marshmallows tasted fluffy and stiff at the same time. It was very different than the ones they sell at the supermarket.

We also tried a kind of chocolate named flakers, with many layers and holes inside, kind of like the Aero chocolates we eat. 

Audrey explained to us that this chocolate was made by accident, “A long time ago this chocolate was leftover from chocolate bars. When someone saw that this was a smart idea to invent a new type of chocolate.  He thought, Why not?”


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Interview with tour guide: Sunni

At the end of the tour, Voice K finally got a chance to interview with our tour guide Audrey Ooi.

She said, “I think one of the biggest challenges is when you face people who are not interested in the tour.  You need to experiment with the people to help them regain their interest.” 

One of Audrey’s best experiences was when there was an old lady with health issues, and slowed the team down.  But to Audrey’s surprise everyone else on the tour were very understanding about the situation and enjoyed the tour very much.

Audrey also explained the most popular sweets in the past few years. 

“I think the most popular sweets in the past few years are definitely the churros,” she said.  Other than this, people also favored the Take out; Eat in Catering, where Hiyan told about her exciting life and the stories of her shop. 

 

My opinions: Raymond

                Hiyan said, “Communication is the key to success.”  The Kensington market has been around for more than a century, and so have the stores.  Small companies usually don’t survive long for generations. As a historic market, the stores start in a community.  Other than providing the foods, though, the market also knows what the customers need.  Then, they grow – in popularity and reputation.  Even though the people come from different places, they felt that they were treated as old friends here.  With good communication, the stores kept their business, the customers kept their community, and I kept my taste.

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The Eye of David Dunlap Observatory

9/30/2014

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by Raymond Qiu (Age 10) 
I used to look at the sky, thinking about how astronauts ever reached the atmosphere.  I used to think of it as if it’s another world.  I was far away.  Then, the little device called ‘binoculars’ came into my hand when I was six.  In the day, the sun was prominent behind my blooming cherry tree.  At night, stars remain silent, but shimmer across the deep sky.  I became ardent to get one step closer with a telescope set.  Finally, I got the chance to visit the other planets through the eyes of the David Dunlap Observatory (DDO).  

On a July evening, my family car was parked up in a forest environment of Richmond Hill.  Staring through the trees, the top of a pure white dome was coated with an amber shine by a beautiful sunset.  This building is The Observatory, whose sidewalk leads directly north.  The DDO was proposed by Clarence. A. Chant, the father of astronomy, and was established in the 1930s by David Dunlap.  DDO includes the largest telescope in Canada.  In 2013 it celebrated the 16,000'th visitor since 2008 – 2009.

You definitely don’t have to be an astrologist to enjoy the view through the telescopes of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, Toronto Centre.  Since 2009, DDO started educational programs for kids.  I was prepared for the family talk tonight, and can’t wait to be old enough for the ‘Star Talk’ program next year. The ‘Star Talk’ program offers awesome topics on astronomy, space science and sometimes, science fiction. The ‘Family Nights’ program is a great introduction to the night sky for the younger guests.  Unlike ‘Star Talk,' the ‘Family Nights’ program accepts any child in a range between 8 and 17 years old.   

At 9:00pm, The Observatory door opened. Mr. Ed Hitchcock, our program operator, welcomed us to the program with a big smile.  Before Ed brought us to the second storey, he showed us a blue concrete piece on the wall.  The structure isn’t a normal wall.  It’s actually isolated from the building with a layer of rubber plastic, which goes up to the second floor and two storeys underground, anchored to the bedrock.  “Now, no matter how you jump, the vibration doesn’t carry over to the structure.  So that keeps the telescope super vibration- proof,” Ed said.  Once we stepped onto the second floor, we came to a massive telescope pointing at the sky like a canon.  The telescope was only 2 inches larger than the one in Vancouver BC, and was titled ‘Largest’ in Canada.  

“It was built in England, disassembled, brought to New Castle, reassembled, tested if it worked, disassembled, brought to Richmond Hill, and then permanently built,” explained Ed.  When you think of telescopes, you will most likely think of glass lens, but this telescope uses mirrors. Ed told us, “We’re actually looking for something to gather faint light from other objects, rather than reflections.  A mirror can focus the light the same way as a lens can, but the advantage is that you can bounce light off the front surface without blocking the path of light.” In the DDO, the mirrors are cleaned, and recoated with a fresh thin layer of aluminum every other year, which rustproofs and shatter-proofs the delicate glass.  The telescope was built in the 1930s, and there wasn’t enough technology for the telescope to be automated and computerized.  However, even with the lack of technology, DDO has still found and done research on the first black hole.  

After we visited the telescope, a couple of the volunteers directed us to a room on the second floor of The Administration Building.  It’s a room with cushions scattered on the floor and the lights turned off.  A large picture that showed the DDO at night was projected onto the wall.  It gave me the sensation that I was lying down on the grass while watching the sky. 
 
“Do you know which star is always visible each and every night throughout the year, and do you know why?” Our speaker, Rob, started his presentation with an interesting question.  “Yes, Polaris, the North Star.  It appears unmoving in the sky because it’s positioned close to the line of Earth's axis projected into the space. The way people used to find home was to follow the North Star.”  Rob also talked about planets, galaxies, constellations, stars and their life cycles.  Specifically, scientists proved the first black hole by observing a star named HIP98298.  A spacecraft named Kepler was mentioned by Rob too.  Kepler was launched in 2009, on the mission to find exoplanets similar to the Earth.  In the end, Rob introduced us to a useful website called Stellarium to check out other stars and planets.


When we left the building, it was pitch black outside.  About a half-dozen smaller telescopes were being set up and tested by volunteers on the lawn.  Some have computer controls; others use techniques similar to the larger eye.  The telescopes are all portable, but have a surprisingly high precision.    I almost jumped when I heard someone exclaim, “I saw it!  I saw it!”  When my eye approached the small lens, I finally saw Saturn for the first time in my life.  Its beautiful rings seem to glow in the dark. “Do you know that you’re looking at the Saturn from one hour ago? The light takes one hour to travel to us,” volunteer Paul told us. I slowly steered the telescope, and quickly caught a glimpse of the burning Mars, which shares characteristics of life with  Earth.

David Dunlap Observatory is not only a cool building where scientists do research, but also a place with some of the most fascinating educational programs of which kids benefit.  This year I can enjoy all of these epic sights in an open area.  If the city council decides to build nearby, they can simply be blocking a blinding view of the sprinkling stars.  I hope the DDO doesn’t have a shortage on money.  When I’m 11, I will be allowed to participate in the ‘Star Talk’, with more information, more perfection, and more fun.
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